Use "parched" in a sentence

1. My throat is parched.

2. Bulgur definition is - parched cracked wheat

3. They gnaw at the parched ground

4. * The parched ground drank in the drops.

5. Puddles were forming on the parched earth.

6. And from parched ground fresh water flows,

7. My throat is parched from the run.

8. Between the mounds the soil was parched.

9. 8 When applied topically, they can hydrate parched skin.

10. Can you not see the gentleman is parched?

11. Give me a sip of that, I'm parched.

12. The grass they always lay on parched yellow.

13. Without ground water, our societies would be parched.

14. The torrid rays of the sun parched the soil.

15. The eyes were open, the mouth parched and breathless.

16. 35 The wilderness and the parched land will exult,+

17. Beneath Australia’s parched crust lie 19 major groundwater basins.

18. The Nile canals of Egypt will become low and parched.

19. Phil raised a glass of water to his parched lips.

20. Like the shadow of a massive crag in a parched land.

21. The road winds for miles through parched earth, scrub and cactus.

22. Arid definition, being without moisture; extremely dry; parched: Arid land;an Arid climate

23. " And just like a parched man sets out to look for a well... "

24. The earth was so parched that there were huge cracks in it.

25. I struck a match on a rock and set the parched June grass ablaze.

26. His mouth was parched with expectation and from the whisky of the night before.

27. Adopting fuzzy mathematics, the paper evaluated synthetically the quality of Tibetan parched feed proportioning.

28. It is very humid but parched in some months, making the weather very volatile.

29. But then another seven ears, wind-parched and sickly, sprouted up and devoured the choice ones.

30. The water drives out insects from the parched ground, which are snapped up by plovers.

31. In Palermo, Italy, “Saint” Joseph was dumped in a parched garden to await rain.

32. Suddenly the South Lawn no longer looked stately and green, just hot and parched.

33. IN PARCHED DESERTS of Africa, where rainfall is scarce, grows a jewel—the desert rose.

34. During those 70 years, it became a place of wild vegetation, of parched areas, the habitation of jackals.

35. There is sun, heavy silence, a pervasive scent of parched vegetation, a lizard materialized on a rock.

36. The parched remnants were, for Roosevelt, a stark object lesson in the need for animal protection.

37. When finally I made the summit, my throat parched, my thigh muscles trembling, the herb woman was waiting.

38. But when it does arrive, parched, rock-strewn ground is transformed into a veritable carpet of multicolored flowers.

39. They laugh and talk and share their quick meal of bread, parched grain, olives, dried figs, and raisins.

40. Everyone on the site seemed to be out of doors, pottering round their tiny gardens, or lolling on the parched grass.

41. Today, in the parched and barren Mojave Desert, in Southern California, geobiologist Ken Nealson is searching for the secrets to life.

42. And the heat-parched ground will have become as a reedy pool, and the thirsty ground as springs of water.

43. 'hideous, dry, parched, narrow-minded, but my prudent, amassing, calculating Buildress and progenitrix'.6 Edmund Lodge put her character succinctly and not inaccurately

44. The fields became parched and brown and the cattle required additional concentrate feed much as they had done the previous year.

45. Arid (adj.) 1650s, "dry, parched, without moisture," from French Aride "dry" (15c.) or directly from Latin Aridus "dry, Arid, parched," from arere "to be dry," from PIE root *as- "to burn, glow." Figurative sense of "uninteresting" is from 1827.

46. At last, bearing in her arms the infant progeny of Jove , she reached Lycia, weary with her burden and parched with thirst.

47. Like “the shadow of a massive crag in a parched land,” they bring relief to the flock by providing spiritual guidance and refreshment

48. 15 At last, bearing in her arms the infant progeny of Jove , she reached Lycia, weary with her burden and parched with thirst.

49. Astringency is sometimes described as tannic, owing to the tannins (polyphenol compounds found in plants) responsible for that parched feeling in your mouth

50. Cheerful Skewering. By contrast, their early music had exuberance and an occasional oasis of unexpected harmony, but otherwise blended monotonously into the parched badlands of rock.

51. Cameroon is Africa's throbbing heart, a sultry mosaic of active volcanoes, white-sand beaches, thick rainforest and magnificent parched landscapes broken up by the bizarre rock formations of the Sahel.

52. For that matter, high-strung and finely sensitive, the ill treatment had flung him into a fever, which fed by the inflammation of his parched and swollen throat and tongue.

53. In the parched center of Australia, an island almost as large as the continental United States, the Alice Springs Congregation cares regularly for several isolated groups of Aborigines.

54. 12 Now, Abidjan, afloat on watery lagoons, is parched, its citizenry athirst yet fearful of stepping out into the streets, where bodies lie uncollected and the smell of death emanates.

55. Often, when all was dry, the heavens cloudless, and I was parched by thirst, a slight cloud would Bedim the sky, shed the few drops that revived me, and vanish.

56. Often, when all was dry, the heavens cloudless, and I was parched by thirst, a slight cloud would Bedim the sky, shed the few drops that revived me, and vanish.

57. With such variety of soil types and climate zones, including parched desert in the south and snow-clad mountains in the north, this land yielded a remarkable variety of crops.

58. (Isaiah 34:9, 10a) The land of Edom becomes so parched that it is as if the dust were sulfur and the torrent valleys were filled, not with water, but with pitch.

59. 2 days ago · This low-slung architectural cluster, nestled into the almost Cartoonishly parched and beautiful foothills of the Santa Monica Mountains, is home to corporate support centers, strip malls and

60. (Isaiah 34:9, 10) The land of Edom is thus portrayed as becoming so parched that it was as if its torrent valleys were running with pitch and as if its dust were sulphur, and then these combustible substances were set afire. —Compare Revelation 17:16.

61. She has now retired from her accounting job; this new liberation has granted her the privilege of following her artistic moods, allowing her art to flow according to its own nature, like the temperamental flooding of rivers when the skies send rain Careening across a parched landscape.

62. The Carny left behind a horse so skin and bone that he named Sorrow And it was in a shallow, unmarked grave That that old nag was laid In the then parched meadow And it was the dwarves that were given the task of digging the ditch And laying the nag's carcass in the ground

63. Adust: 1 adj dried out by heat or excessive exposure to sunlight “a vast desert all Adust ” Synonyms: baked , parched , scorched , sunbaked dry free from liquid or moisture; lacking natural or normal moisture or depleted of water; or no longer wet adj burned brown by the sun “"of an Adust complexion"- Sir Walter Scott” Synonyms: brunet ,

64. Connecting, Connecting with your song: Connecting, Connecting with your dream: Connecting, Connecting with your life: Connecting with you (Eh Ooh Ah) Everything's too hard for me right now: その乾いた日常に夢をDownload sono kawaita nichijou ni yume o Download Download a dream into that parched everyday life of yours

65. Beersheba is the southernmost town in the land promised to Abraham.Located on the road towards Egypt in the parched south region known in the Hebrew as "the Negeb" the land had sparse pasture land when Abraham was living among the Philistines.The spot where the town grew had a major well frequented by travelers and shepherds alike.

66. The word Austere originally comes from the Proto-Indo-European root *saus-, which means “dry” or “parched.”That root, *saus-, is the source of the Greek adjective austeros, meaning “sour,” “harsh,” or, more specifically, “drying the tongue.”Figuratively, austeros can also mean "strict" or "severe." This term led to the development of the Latin adjective austerus, which